1. A bill which challenges the validity, under the federal
Constitution, of an order of a state administrative board
purporting to be authorized by a state statute, and seeks to enjoin
its enforcement, is within the jurisdiction of the District Court
under Jud.Code, § 266 where application for an interlocutory
injunction is pressed to hearing, and an appeal from a decree
dismissing the bill after the interlocutory injunction has been
denied, may be taken directly to this Court. P.
278 U. S.
93.
2. Acts 91, of 1922, and 252, of 1924, of Louisiana, do not
empower the Commissioner of Conservation to refuse a permit to
manufacture carbon black from natural gas to a person able and
willing to comply with the statutory requirements. P.
278 U. S.
94.
11 F.2d 386
reversed.
Appeal from a final decree of the district court dismissing a
bill for an injunction. The Court, composed of three judges under
Jud.Code § 266, had previously denied an application for a
preliminary injunction.
MR. JUSTICE BRANDEIS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This suit was brought into a federal court for Louisiana by
Herkness, an owner of natural gas wells, to enjoin the
Page 278 U. S. 93
Commissioner of Conservation and the Attorney General of that
state from interfering with the erection, on plaintiff's land, and
the operation, of a factory for the manufacture of carbon black
from natural gas. The bill alleges that a number of other persons
are now engaged in that business, and have been for many years with
the sanction of the Department of Conservation; that it had been
its practice to require persons about to engage in such manufacture
to apply for a permit; that one of its rules declares unlawful the
erection of such a factory without having first obtained one; that
plaintiff was refused a permit; that the sole ground of refusal was
the policy recently announced by the Commissioner not to issue a
permit for the erection of any new carbon black plants and to
gradually reduce the amount of gas which holders of permits to
operate existing plants can utilize for that purpose, and that this
policy has become a fixed rule of administration. The bill charges
that the order refusing to issue a permit to the plaintiff is void
because in excess of the powers conferred by the statutes or which
could be conferred under the constitution of the state, and also
because it violates the due process clause and the equal protection
clause of the Fourteenth Amendment. A restraining order and an
interlocutory injunction, as well as a permanent injunction, were
sought. There were adequate allegations of threatened irreparable
injury.
The District Judge issued a restraining order. The hearing upon
the application for an interlocutory injunction was had before
three judges under paragraph 266 of the Judicial Code as amended,
and the case was later submitted by agreement as upon final
hearing. The court denied the injunction and dismissed the bill,
11 F.2d
386, but later granted a restraining order pending the appeal.
As the bill challenged the validity under the Federal Constitution
of an order of an administrative board of the state,
Page 278 U. S. 94
the district court had jurisdiction under § 266,
Oklahoma Gas Co. v. Russell, 261 U.
S. 290, and this Court has jurisdiction on direct
appeal. We have no occasion to consider any of the constitutional
questions presented. For, in our opinion, the statutes do not
purport to confer upon the Commissioner power to refuse a permit to
a person able and willing to comply with the requirements
prescribed by the statute.
See Greene v. Louisville &
Interurban Railroad Co., 244 U. S. 499,
244 U. S. 508;
Dawson v. Kentucky Distilleries Co., 255
U. S. 388,
255 U. S.
295.
The conservation of natural resources has been the subject of
much legislation in Louisiana. [
Footnote 1] The possible wastefulness of the use of
natural gas in the manufacture of carbon black was recognized, and
the legislature dealt fully with this use by Act 252 of 1924,
which, in effect, embodies the provisions of Act 91 of 1922.
State v. Thrift Oil & Gas Co., 162 La. 165, 193. No
law declares such use necessarily wasteful. Nor has the state
purported to confer upon the Commissioner power to refuse a permit
to new concerns and to restrict the use to the persons already
engaged in the manufacture of carbon black. On the contrary, the
use is expressly sanctioned in § 1 of Act 91 of 1922, which
declares, "that natural gas may be used in the manufacture of
carbon black under the conditions as fixed and imposed by the
provisions of" that Act. And it is to those conditions and the
means of ensuring their observance that the other provisions of the
Act relate. Section 2 thereof directs the Commissioner to
determine
"what percentage of consumption of natural gas produced by each
gas well may be used in the manufacture of carbon black, . . .
which percentage shall not be less than fifteen percent and not
more
Page 278 U. S. 95
than twenty percent of the potential capacity of such well. . .
."
By § 3, he is authorized to reduce the consumption of
natural gas used in the manufacture of carbon black below that
minimum
"after promulgation for sixty days of an order to that effect,
whenever [and only whenever] it is actually necessary to do so in
obtaining an adequate supply of natural gas for domestic heating
and lighting purposes in the State of Louisiana, and for
manufacturing plants, industries and enterprises located and
operated within the State of Louisiana, other than those engaged in
the manufacture of carbon black. . . ."
Other sections of the 1922 Act define the conditions under which
natural gas can be burned into carbon black. There is not even a
contention that a condition existed which would have authorized the
issue of an order reducing the minimum percentage of use, pursuant
to § 3 of Act 91 of 1922.
Many detailed provisions concerning permits for the building of
plants to burn natural gas into carbon black were added by Act 252
of 1924. But the additional provisions, and the specific powers
there conferred upon the Commissioner, deal only with regulation of
the use. The legislation contemplates not not restriction of the
use to existing plants, but the further issue of permits to all who
will
"completely abide by and comply with all of the provisions of
this Act, and with all the rules and regulations of the
Commissioner of Conservation established under the provisions of
this Act."
Section 5. And it expressly provides that
"The authority given the Commissioner of Conservation by this
Act shall in no sense be understood to supersede or nullify any of
the provisions of this Act, or any other act of this state, but
shall be cumulative and in aid thereof."
§ 11.
As it is clear that the refusal of the Commissioner was not
justified by any statutory provision, we have no occasion to
consider the limitations imposed by the constitution
Page 278 U. S. 96
of the state upon discriminatory action [
Footnote 2] and upon delegation of legislative power to
an executive department. [
Footnote
3]
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
Act 71 of 1906; Act 144 of 1908; Acts 172, 190, 196 and 283 of
1910; Act 127 of 1912; Acts 268 and 270 of 1918; Act 250 of
1920.
[
Footnote 2]
See Louisiana v. Mahner, 43 La.Ann. 496;
Town of
Crowley v. West, 52 La.Ann. 526, 533;
Town of Mandeville
v. Band, 111 La. 806;
State ex rel. Galle v. New
Orleans, 113 La. 371;
New Orleans v. Palmisano, 146
La. 518;
State ex rel. Dickson v. Harrison, 161 La.
218.
[
Footnote 3]
See State v. Billot, 154 La. 402;
State v. Thrift
Oil & Gas Co., 162 La. 165.